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Information released online from June 2012 to September 2017.Note: Content in this archive site is NOT UPDATED, and external links may not function. External links to other Internet sites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views contained therein.

USAID Commemorates World Malaria Day

Young girl with malaria bed net.

Maggie Hallahan

World Malaria Day was April 25, 2013. Each year, World Malaria Day commemorates the global fight toward zero malaria deaths and mobilizes action to combat the disease. On this occasion, the President's Malaria Initiative (PMI), led by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and implemented together with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), released its Seventh Annual Report to Congress [PDF]. PMI also hosted an eleven hour Twitter relay with partners to raise awareness. Visit the World Malaria Day page to learn more about PMI's work against malaria, and read about PMI's successes in Politico and on SmartGlobalHealth.org. Read more about Religious Leaders in Mozambique who are "Noisy About Malaria"

USAID In the News

This week, the President's Food Aid Reform in his FY2014 Budget Proposal garnered significant attention both media and from members of Congress at Administrator Shah's hearings on Capital Hill.

Delving into the testimony, Politico says "Rajiv Shah - the bright young star at the United States Agency for International Development" - found himself "promoting wholesale changes that threaten old alliances with American farmers and mariners." Shah testified that "Behind all this is President Barack Obama's plan to revamp international food aid to allow more flexible, cash purchases overseas - rather than commodity shipments from the US." In its "Democracy In America" blog, The Economist notes that "USAID's head, Rajiv Shah, is optimistic that the reformers will win this argument, pointing to a fiscal environment in which every dollar must be made to count," however, "this would not be America if congressional turf fights did not loom." In the New York Times piece titled "When Food Isn't the Answer to Hunger", Tina Rosenberg recalls that "in many places, people go hungry because there is no food. But in a lot of places, food is available and the market is working - people are just too poor to buy it. In those places, giving individuals or charitable groups cash to buy food can make food aid cheaper, faster and fairer." Rosenberg adds that "by strengthening and not undercutting local farmers, cash aid also helps countries to avoid hunger later."